A Path to 100 Percent Renewable Energy: Grid-Forming Inverters will Give Us the Grid We Need Now

IEEE Spectrum(2024)

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Abstract
This is a more urgent problem than it might sound. The westernmost Hawaiian island of significant size, Kauai is home to around 70,000 residents and 30,000 tourists at any given time. Renewable energy accounts for 70 percent of the energy produced in a typical year—a proportion that's among the highest in the world and that can be hard to sustain for such a small and isolated grid. During the day, the local system operator, the Kauai Island Utility Cooperative, sometimes reaches levels of 90 percent from solar alone. But on 2 April, the 26-MW generator was running near its peak output, to compensate for the drop in solar output as the sun set. At the moment when it failed, that single generator had been supplying 60 percent of the load for the entire island, with the rest being met by a mix of smaller generators and several utility-scale solar-and-battery systems.
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Key words
Renewable Energy,Grid-forming Inverters,Physical Characteristics,Power System,Power Generation,Natural Gas,Power Grid,Alternating Current,Fuel Cell,Voltage Source,Wind Power,South Australia,Large-scale Systems,Power Devices,Carbon Reduction,Level Of Resources,Wind Turbine,Urgent Problem
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